The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

MEDICAL MARIJUANA: THE NEXT STEP IN GA.

‘The law has to mean something,’ Attorney General Chris Carr says.

- By Dan Klepal dan.klepal@ajc.com

Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr said he thinks the charges for open records violations filed earlier this week against former Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed’s press secretary will send a message around the state that compliance with the state’s sunshine laws has to be taken seriously.

Making his first public comments since charges were filed Monday against former city spokeswoma­n Jenna Garland, Carr said his office takes its enforcemen­t responsibi­lities seriously — but that he would rather government officials reach out to his

office for training that will help them avoid violations of the law in the first place.

“The law has to mean something,” Carr said Thursday in an interview with The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on and Channel 2 Action News. “We have an open records and open meetings law for a reason. It is an important part of what we are as a government and how we govern ourselves. If there is a situation where we have to do this again, absolutely I will do it again. But I would rather work with individual­s ... to make sure they understand what the law is.”

Georgia’s open government laws are meant to ensure public officials remain accountabl­e to citizens. State law requires public agencies to respond to records requests within three business days, and provide records as soon as they are available.

Carr’s office ordered a firstof-its-kind criminal investigat­ion of the Reed administra­tion after AJC and Channel 2 reported on text messages between Garland and a watershed communicat­ions officer, in which Garland instructed her subordinat­e to delay release of water billing records that would prove embarrassi­ng to Reed and some members of the City Council.

The billing documents were only turned over after attorneys for Channel 2 threatened to sue. The media organizati­ons were provided the text messages, which were sent on private cell phones, by the watershed spokeswoma­n last year after she left city employment.

Carr’s office filed a twocount charging document against Garland that quotes from those text messages. Both counts are misdemeano­rs carrying fines up to $1,000 each and a year in jail.

The first count relates to Garland telling the watershed official to “drag this out as long as possible” and “provide the informatio­n in the most confusing format available.” The second count relates to Garland instructin­g the official to “hold all” responsive documents until the reporter asked for an update.

Garland’s attorney told the AJC earlier this week that Garland “acted in good faith at all times and did not violate any statutes.”

Carr declined to comment when asked about two other apparent sunshine law violations that became part of the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion probe of the issue.

In one instance, Reed’s communicat­ions director Anne Torres improperly sought to delay release of an employment contract for a newly hired cabinet official. In the other, former City Attorney Jeremy Berry responded to an AJC request for legal invoices with documents his office had created to mimic invoices but that were not authentic legal bills.

“We think it will send a message,” Carr said of the charges against Garland.

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